Ann Arbor R. Co. v. Fox

92 F. 494, 34 C.C.A. 497, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2163
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1899
DocketNo. 636
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 92 F. 494 (Ann Arbor R. Co. v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ann Arbor R. Co. v. Fox, 92 F. 494, 34 C.C.A. 497, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2163 (6th Cir. 1899).

Opinion

TAFT, Circuit Judge.

The statute of Michigan provides that:

“Any railroad company building, owning or operating any railroad in this state, shall be liable for all loss or damage to property by fire originating from such railroad, either from the engines passing over such road, fires set by the company’s employes, by order of the officers of said road, or otherwise originating in the constructing or operating of such railroad; provided, that such railroad company shall not be held so liable if it prove to the satisfaction of the court or jury that such fire originated from fire by engines whose machinery, smoke-stack, or fire-boxes were in good order and properly managed, or fires originating in building, repairing or operating such railroad, and that all reasonable precautions had been taken to prevent their origin, and that proper efforts had been made to extinguish the same in case of their extending beyond the limits of said road, when the existence of such fire is communicated to any of the officers of such company.”

The court charged the jury that:

“Where it appears that fire has originated in the manner mentioned by the statute, and injury has happened therefrom, the duty devolves upon the defendant of showing that, notwithstanding it has happened, the railroad company — or receiver, in this case — has not been' guilty of any negligence which has caused the fire, and has taken proper precautions in the construction and management" of his machinery, and in other particulars pointed out by the statute.” “Under the statute, upon proof of a fire having started from one of the engines of a railroad company, there is a presumption that it has been caused by some fault, some negligence, on the part of the company, either in the structure or management of the engines, or in the manner in which it has taken care of its right of way; and upon proof of the fact that the fire has been caused by an engine of a railroad company, which has passed over onto the land of private owners, and there caused damage, a prima facie case is made out, and the railroad company cannot escape liability, except by assuming and maintaining the burden of showing that it has exercised due care in the premises.”

We think that this was the plain and manifest effect of the statute. The statute first imposes a liability upon the railway company for all loss occasioned by fire originating from the operation of its road, and follows this with an exception or proviso in which the railroad company.is given the opportunity to escape such liability by showing that it has exercised due care; This necessarily imposes upon the railroad company, if it wishes to take advantage of the proviso of the statute, the burden of showing the fact upon which the proviso becomes operative, to wit, that it exercised due care with respect to the prevention of the fire, which had originated in its operation of the road. But it is argued that, even if this be conceded to be the correct view of the statute, the statute is not thus to be construed where the property destroyed is upon the right of' way of the company. The learned counsel says that:

“Section 3323 of Howell’s Annotated Statutes of Michigan permits and contemplates that railway companies shall have 100 feet as a right of way, which they are obliged to keep reasonably clear and free from combustible matter. This width is allowed, not merely for building additional tracks, but for better security from fire from sparks thrown by the engine. It is presumed that if the track is in the middle of the right of way, and the latter is kept reasonably clear of combustible matter, such sparks as are necessarily emitted by the engines will fall inside the right of way, and do no harm; [497]*497and so railroad companies are properly charged with the duty of keeping the right of way <;lear, and are made liable for fires set outside the light of way; and, when fires are set outside the right of way, this fact raises a presumption of negligence on the part of The railway company. JBut this has no application where the plaintiff himself voluntarily places his propel ty on railroad property, inside of this danger limit. In so doing, he takes his chances. TVe do not think a plaintiff in such case should have the beneiit of such a presumption in his favor.”

Títere is nothing in the particular statute oí Michigan we are discussing which requires that a railroad shall have a, right oí way 100 feet in width, nor is there anything to show that the application of the statute was limited to any particular width of the right of way. Where a railroad company and the abutting property owner by agreement temporarily or permanently narrow the distance from the track to the edge of the right of way, as they did here, by a fence erected considerably within the right of way, it may be conceded that the risk of fire "is increased. But, the relation of the parties to the risk and danger is the same. It is an additional risk for each, but the loss must fail just where it would have fallen had a greater distance between the lumber and the track been maintained; for they voluntarily assumed the burden from the increased danger.

In Railroad Co. v. Richardson, 91 U. S. 454, the statute of Vermont provided that:

“When any injury is clone to a building or other property by lire communicated by a locomotive engine of any railroad corporation the said corporation shall be responsible in damages for such injury unless they shall show that they have used all due caul ion and diligence, and employed suitable expedients to prevent such injury.”

The property destroyed in that case was property of the abutting owner, built on the right of way by the owner for the convenience of the owner and railroad company. The railroad company contended that the statute did not apply to property located within the limits of the railroad. The supreme court said, speaking through Mr. Justice Strong:

•‘This view of the statute, as we have already remarked, is nol, in our judgment, collect as a general proposition, and certainly not in its application to a case where property is placed within the lines of a railway, by the consent of a railway company, for the convenience, in part, of its traffic.”

The lumber in this case was placed within the lines of the railway company's right of way originally for the convenience of the railway company; that is, for loading and unloading. Subsequently a side track was built from which the lumber was loaded and unloaded, but the piles were permitted to remain. The side track was often used by the railway company for switching cars and trains in its general business. The storing of the lumber and (lie use of the side track were the result of an arrangement profitable to both parties. The case before us cannot be distinguished from the Richardson Case.

The second assignment of error was based on the refusal by the court to give-the following charge:

“Even if you find that the burning of the plaintiffs’ lumber was caused by the negligence of Iho railroad, either in the condition or management of its engines, or in maintaining an unsafe condiiion of llio right of way, the defendant will not be liable therefor, unless you also find that the burning of the lumber was the natural and immediate result of the fire communicated [498]

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Related

Dolph v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.
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120 F. 663 (Second Circuit, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
92 F. 494, 34 C.C.A. 497, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ann-arbor-r-co-v-fox-ca6-1899.